As we head into 2023, we look back at the last year and the focus will continue to be on reducing risk exposure and resilience. Organizations are strengthening their ransomware defense, security, and privacy approach to product development, cyberattack response, supply chain risk management and operational technology (OT) security and based on working with customers across industry sectors, here is a compilation of some trends we predict for 2023. 1.
The cybersecurity landscape is constantly evolving. Criminals are always searching for new ways to compromise enterprise systems, looking for weaknesses in their security.
We all use passwords every day to sign in to our devices and online accounts. But that doesn’t mean they’re a perfect solution.
If you are a code publisher or software developer, your end-users need to trust your software that they download. You, a legit entity, must win their trust and confidence as the source of the file rather than any third party or any infiltrator claiming to be you. Also, they need to know that the code has not been tampered with by any hacker or has any malware inserted in it.
You’ve heard it time and time again: you need a strong password to keep your online accounts safe. Creating complex passwords can be complicated to remember, thats why having a password manager is crucial to remembering all your different passwords without the fear of forgetting your password or risking using an easy password which is guessable to hackers.
Anat Kleinmann, AlgoSec Sr. Product Manager and IaC expert, discusses how incorporating Infrastructure-as-Code into DevSecOps can allow teams to take a preventive approach to secure application connectivity.
Ransomware has been around for a long time — since 1989 — but has scaled up significantly since 2016. Author’s from Accenture and Google Cloud, in addition to our very own Vandana Verma Sehgal (from the Snyk Security Relations Team), recently released a white paper, Ransomware State of Mind: How to Better Protect Your Business, which details the current state of ransomware and solutions to address this growing problem.
U.S. Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.) issued the 35-page report Cybersecurity on Patient Safety on November 3, which called the ongoing transition to better cybersecurity for the healthcare sector as being painfully slow and inadequate. This is despite the fact the healthcare sector is uniquely vulnerable to cyberattacks.